Exposing the Secret
Killer: Eradicating the Roots of Cancer and Chronic Disease
When
I was in medical school at Columbia University in the late 1960’s, I marveled
at the extraordinary genius behind the creation and functioning of the human
body. I became convinced that the complexity and integration of the
extraordinary number of physiological functions with each of the body’s organ
systems was the work of Divine Intelligence.
How
then, I asked myself, how and why do we get sick? This question caused a shift
from a planned career in eye surgery to that of integrative healthcare with the
emphasis on community health and reducing the risk of serious disease.
Today,
in the most expensive healthcare system in the world, we are facing epidemics
of preventable disease.
Breast cancer is a growing problem: A woman’s risk has jumped from 1 in
20 in the 1960’s to 1 in 8 today.
Prostate cancer is also a growing problem: One man in six will get prostate
cancer during his lifetime. Prostate cancer is the most common
type of cancer found in American men other than skin cancer and is the second
leading cause of cancer death in men, only behind lung cancer.
Almost all of our resources regarding cancer have
been focused on early detection and
treatment. Public
debate regarding cancer in the United
States has not focused on the issue of
causation but has revolved primarily around the best means of early
detection.
When I took my 96 year-old father to his HMO for an
x-ray of a swollen wrist, while waiting in the radiology department, I saw a
prominent poster addressing the ‘prevention’ of breast cancer. nThe poster stated: ‘Passionately Pink For Cure. Remember,
early detection is the best protection.’
But is this really true?
When the medical
field talks about prevention they are almost always referring to what
they call ‘secondary prevention’ which means early detection. While it is
vitally important, if one is going to get cancer, to detect it as early as
possible. But early detection is not true prevention (referred to as primary
prevention) which is the state of health sufficient to prevent the onset and
development of disease.
Primary prevention, that is true prevention,
requires an understanding of the causes and a way to resolve those causes and
risk factors before they manifest as a diagnosable cancer.
Effective
solutions and true prevention, therefore, require a correct understanding of the cause.
We
hear a lot about genetics factors and cancer. Inherited BRCA gene mutations are
estimated to be responsible for less than 5 to 10 percent of breast cancers and
about 5 to 10 percent of all prostate cancers diagnosed are hereditary, meaning
that an increased risk for the disease runs in the family.
This
means that potentially 90-95 percent of
breast and prostate cancers are associated with non-genetic lifestyle
and environmental factors which are much more under our control!
The
new science of epigenetics
reveals how the choices you make can change the expression of your genes- and those
of your children.
Cellular health is the
basis for the health of the body. The metabolic interplay of genetics,
environment and lifestyle can
lead to damaged metabolic function on the cellular level triggering
inflammation and the development of cancer.
In
future articles, we’ll discuss the sources of injury at the cellular level, the
resulting inflammation and the most effective ways to address the ‘inflammatory
fire within.’